If you have the lengths of two different sides, add those together and multiply by two to find the perimeter. If you have only the lengths of the diagonal chords, you do not have enough information to find the perimeter, because you also need another side length to determine the angle of the diagonals.
I figured the answer out, I took 1/4 of the parallelogram that is a right triangle, used half the 24 which is 12 and half of 10 which is 5. Used the pythagorean theorem a2 + b2= c2 and came up with the answer 144+25= c2 , which is c=13, all sides are 13, so 13 times 4 is 52
You cannot. There is not enough information.
Length = (1/2 of perimeter) minus (Width) Diagonal = square root of [ (Length)2 + (Width)2 ]
you need length and width length multiply width = area length + length + width + width = perimeter
The perimeter is 31.11 units.
The lengths of the base and the side. You would multiply these to get the area and would double sum of the two to obtain the perimeter measurement.
you can't, because the Pythagorean theorem is for right triangles and the triangles formed by the diagonal of a parallelogram are not right triangles.
The perimeter is its 4 sides added together
The perimeter of a square with a diagonal of 12 centimeters is: 33.9 centimeters.In future, to find out the perimeter of a square when you only know it's diagonal, use Pythagoras or times the diagonal by 2.828427125.This number is irrational, and is like a pi for the diagonals of squares.I call it Tau.It is the relationship between the diagonal of all squares and there perimeter.
You cannot. There is not enough information.
The length of the other diagonal works out as 12cm
Length = (1/2 of perimeter) minus (Width) Diagonal = square root of [ (Length)2 + (Width)2 ]
There is no way to find perimeter from a 3D figure. However, you can find the perimeter of a side of a triangular prism by using perimeter formulas for a parallelogram or triangle.
Measure and add the 4 sides together.
I smell a textbook question...
no
area is length times width
you need length and width length multiply width = area length + length + width + width = perimeter